Background: The self-medication hypothesis is commonly put forward to explain the high prevalence of smoking in psychiatric patients. However, studies supporting the self-medication hypothesis have most often been carried out on chronic patients stabilized by antipsychotics.
Aim: Given that antipsychotics tend to erase psychiatric symptoms, the present study was undertaken on acutely ill patients usually receiving no medications, or on whom medications are ineffective.
Background: Asking psychiatric in-patients about their drug consumption is unlikely to yield reliable results, particularly where alcohol and illicit drug use is involved. The main aim of this study was to compare spontaneous self-reports of drug use in hospitalized psychiatric patients to biological measures of same. A secondary aim was to determine which personal factors were associated with the use of tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drugs as indicated by these biological measures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is mainly a stromal process, showing an increased ratio of stromal to epithelial elements, a collagen type III downregulation, and a collagen types I and IV upregulation. Little is known about elastin gene expression in BPH tissues due to difficulties related to extensive alternative splicing of the elastin gene. Therefore, we analyzed and quantified elastin gene expression in BPH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: In low capacity noncompliant fibrotic bladders, as seen in patients with myelomeningocele, elevated storage pressures ultimately can lead to renal damage. Earlier studies have described an increased deposition of extracellular matrix protein, especially type III collagen, in the detrusor muscle. We analyzed elastin gene expression and quantified elastin gene alteration in the obstructed bladder, correlating urodynamically measured compliance with elastin messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Previous studies have demonstrated that the non-compliant bladder is characterized histologically by an increased deposition of extracellular matrix protein, especially type III collagen, in the muscle wall. We sought to determine if an increased tissue level of type III collagen messenger RNA (mRNA) parallels the observed increase in protein expression.
Materials And Methods: Using a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) quantitative technique we measured and compared the bladder tissue concentration of type III collagen mRNA between an experimental group of patients (n = 7) with urodynamically proven non-compliant bladders (< 12 cc/cm.